The site of present Izmir (formerly Smyrna) …

Years: 3069BCE - 2926BCE

The site of present Izmir (formerly Smyrna) in west central Turkey on the Aegean Sea at the eastern end of the Gulf of Izmir is one of the oldest settlements of the Mediterranean basin.

The 2004 discovery of Yesilova Höyük and the neighboring Yassıtepe, situated in the small delta of Meles River, now the plain of Bornova, reset the starting date of the city's past further back than was previously thought.

The findings of the two seasons of excavations carried out in the Yesilova Höyük by a team of archaeologists from Izmir's Ege University indicate three levels, two of which are prehistoric.

Level 2 bears traces of early to mid-Chalcolithic, and Level 3 of Neolithic settlements.

The indigenous peoples of Izmir would have inhabited these two levels between the seventh millennium BCE and fourth millennium BCE, very roughly.

With the seashore drawing away in time, the site was later used as a cemetery.

Several graves containing artifacts dating, roughly, from 3000 BCE, contemporary with the first city of Troy, were found.

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